Alias the Lone Wolf eBook

The woman stood alone, en silhouette against the glow
of the companionway, her arms thrust out as if to
ward off some threatened danger. A second cry
broke from her lips, shrill with terror, she tottered
and fell as, dropping his cigarette, Lanyard ran to
her.

His vision dazzled by the flame of the match, he sought
in vain for any cause for her apparent fright.
For all he could see, the deck was as empty as he
had presumed it to be all through their conversation.

He found her in a faint unmistakably unaffected.
Footfalls sounded on the deck as he knelt, making
superficial examination. Collison had heard her
cries and witnessed her fall from the bridge and was
coming to investigate.

“What in blazes——!”

Lanyard replied with a gesture of bewilderment:
“She was just going below. I’d stopped
to light a cigarette, saw nothing to account for this.
Wait: I’ll fetch water.”

He darted down the companionway, filled a glass from
a silver thermos carafe, and hurried back. As
he arrived at the top of steps, Collison announced:
“It’s all right. She’s coming
to.”

Supported in the arms of the second mate, Liane was
beginning to breathe deeply and looking round with
dazed eyes. Lanyard dropped on a knee and set
the glass to her lips. She gulped twice, mechanically,
her gaze fixed to his face. Then suddenly memory
cleared, and she uttered a bubbling gasp of returning
dread.

“Popinot!” she cried, as Lanyard hastily
took the glass away. “Popinot—­he
was there—­I saw him—­standing
there!”

A trembling arm indicated the starboard deck just
forward of the companion housing. But of course,
when Lanyard looked, there was no one there ... if
there had ever been....

XXIII

THE CIGARETTE

Lanyard found himself exchanging looks of mystification
with Collison, and heard his own voice make the flat
statement: “But there is nobody....”
Collison muttered words which he took to be: No,
and never was. “But you must have seen
him from the bridge,” Lanyard insisted blankly,
“if....”

“I looked around as soon as I heard her call
out,” Collison replied; “but I didn’t
see anybody, only mademoiselle here—­and
you, of course, with that match.”

“Please help me up,” Liane Delorme asked
in a faint voice. Collison lent a hand.
In the support and shelter of Lanyard’s arm the
woman’s body quivered like that of a frightened
child. “I must go to my stateroom,”
she sighed uncertainly. “But I am afraid...”

“Do not be. Remember Mr. Collison and I...
Besides, you know, there was nobody...”

The assertion seemed to exasperate her; her voice
discovered new strength and violence.

“But I am telling you I saw ... that assassin!”—­she
shuddered again—­“standing there,
in the shadow, glaring at me as if I had surprised
him and he did not know what next to do. I think
he must have been spying down through the skylight;
it was the glow from it that showed me his red, dirty
face of a pig.”